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Out of curiosity I grabbed it off of the AUR. It's a nice looking app, as I'd expect from Yorba. It feels a lot like Geary did when it first came out -- not very feature-rich, but lots of potential. And look at Geary now, probably the best overall mail program on Linux. They've definitely got a nice focus on design that you only really see among OSX developers these days.

I'm hopeful for them to support webdav, as I have my ownCloud calenders that I like to keep in sync between all of my devices.

Comment

Out of curiosity I grabbed it off of the AUR. It's a nice looking app, as I'd expect from Yorba. It feels a lot like Geary did when it first came out -- not very feature-rich, but lots of potential. And look at Geary now, probably the best overall mail program on Linux. They've definitely got a nice focus on design that you only really see among OSX developers these days.

I'm hopeful for them to support webdav, as I have my ownCloud calenders that I like to keep in sync between all of my devices.

What about mem usage and stability? It's using EDS which gave me nightmares altough this was a pretty long time ago.

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What about mem usage and stability? It's using EDS which gave me nightmares altough this was a pretty long time ago.

For me it's pretty stable and functional. I really like this app already. What makes Gnome attractive for me is the level of intergration and simplicity. I know I can get my Google Calander in KDE, but it's not as easy as just going to Control Center -> Online Account and flipping on the Calander switch for your Google Account. The only thing that was missing was a way to add and modify my calander and that where California comes in.